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Quantitative understanding of factors driving yield increases of major food crops is essential for effective prioritization of research and development. Yet previous estimates had limitations in distinguishing among contributing factors such as changing climate and new agronomic and genetic technologies. Here, we distinguished the separate contribution of these factors to yield advance using an extensive database collected from the largest irrigated maize-production domain in the world located in Nebraska (United States) during the 2005-to-2018 period. We found that 48% of the yield gain was associated with a decadal climate trend, 39% with agronomic improvements, and, by difference, only 13% with improvement in genetic yield potential. The fact that these findings were so different from most previous studies, which gave much-greater weight to genetic yield potential improvement, gives urgency to the need to reevaluate contributions to yield advances for all major food crops to help guide future investments in research and development to achieve sustainable global food security. If genetic progress in yield potential is also slowing in other environments and crops, future crop-yield gains will increasingly rely on improved agronomic practices.
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Gonzalo Rizzo
Juan Pablo Monzón
Fatima A. Tenorio
Insecta mundi
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
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Rizzo et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a010080b124fe5819862b7e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2113629119
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